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Watch Grizzly Bear reunite for first live show in six years
Music

Watch Grizzly Bear reunite for first live show in six years

by jummy84 October 14, 2025
written by jummy84

Grizzly Bear reunited for their first live show in six years last night (October 13) – check out footage from the gig below.

The Brooklyn indie four-piece went on hiatus in 2019, two years after the release of their most recent album, ‘Painted Ruins’.

In November 2023, a couple of months after sharing that he opened up his own therapy practice, founder and co-lead vocalist Ed Droste suggested that the band could end their hiatus at some stage, and in May this year, the band announced their return with news of a US tour in the autumn.

Last night, the band kicked off the tour with their first of five homecoming shows at Brooklyn Steel, and the setlist took fans all the way through their career. Their 2013 single ‘Will Calls’ got its live debut, while ‘Alligator’, from their 2004 debut album ‘Horn Of Plenty’, was played for the first time since 2008.

Another live rarity, 2006’s ‘Little Brother’, was played for the first time since 2014. And the show also saw their first documented performance of ‘Deep Sea Diver’ (via Setlist.fm) – likely the first time it’s been played since 2005.

They played many of their most popular tracks, too, including ‘Two Weeks’, ‘Yet Again’, and ‘Mourning Sound’.

Grizzly Bear’s Brooklyn setlist was: 

‘​​Southern Point’
‘Alligator’
‘Sleeping Ute’
‘Mourning Sound’
‘Yet Again’
‘Cut-Out’
‘Little Brother’
‘Ready, Able’
‘Fine For Now’
‘Foreground Play’
‘While You Wait For The Others’
‘Will Calls’
‘Two Weeks’
‘On A Neck, On A Spit’
‘Three Rings’
‘Sun In Your Eyes’
Encore:
‘Deep Sea Diver’
‘Sky Took Hold’

Speaking to Pitchfork last week, they said that they’ll be switching their setlists up every night, Co-lead vocalist Daniel Rossen saying: “We’re trying to balance the songs that we assume are the popular ones or algorithmically favourite songs, coupled with more obscure songs that we maybe wouldn’t have touched at the time.”

Tonight (October 14), Grizzly Bear are set to return to Brooklyn Steel, before another three shows there on October 16, 17 and 18. They’re then playing two shows in Chicago before heading to Los Angeles, San Francisco and Oakland. You can find remaining tickets here.

From October 16, they’ll be joined by Beach House vocalist Victoria Legrand for a handful of songs each night. “Truly honored to have such a queen with us,” they said when announcing the news last week.

While on hiatus, Droste confirmed in 2020 that he’d left and was studying to become a therapist, though Rossen and drummer Chris Bear continued to work together in the meantime, including on the soundtrack to the 2023 movie Past Lives.

Rossen also released his debut solo album, ‘You Belong There’, in 2022, and supported it with a series of North American and European tour dates.

October 14, 2025 0 comments
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The Second Coming of D'Angelo
Music

The Second Coming of D’Angelo

by jummy84 October 14, 2025
written by jummy84


D
’Angelo is a morning person, of sorts. When he’s working in the studio, as was often the case in the 14-year interregnum between 2000’s Voodoo and 2014’s Black Messiah, he quits his all-night recording sessions just in time to greet each day’s sunrise. “I’m definitely on the night shift,” he says, drawing deep on one of a series of Newport cigarettes, not long after midnight in the midtown Manhattan studio where he recorded much of Black Messiah. He’s wearing a denim shirt unbuttoned over a white undershirt, dark jeans and leather boots. Dog tags bearing the names of his three children hang from a chain around his neck. He looks weary, though he woke up not long ago. It’s his first interview since he released one of the most universally acclaimed albums in years, an album that seemed as if it might never come out at all.

D’Angelo could well be the most singular, visionary star to emerge from R&B since Prince. His music, stuffed with live instrumentation and harmonic sophistication, is suffused with the sound and spirit of Sly Stone, Miles Davis, Jimi Hendrix and Marvin Gaye, among many others. But if Prince has been prolific to a fault, D’Angelo has had the opposite problem: It took him five years to follow up his first album, 1995’s Brown Sugar, thanks in part to writer’s block and label problems. But Voodoo was a stone classic, with the Roots’ Questlove and session bassist Pino Palladino helping him create a swampy, hip-hop-informed mélange of black music’s past and its possible future. His nude beefcake video for the slinky “Untitled (How Does It Feel)” was an MTV and BET smash, making him a sex symbol. (Friends said it haunted him as he slipped out of shape in the years to come.) And then, aside from a few guest appearances, silence.

D’Angelo’s heavy-lidded eyes are warm, with flashes of wariness. He’s quick to laughter, and radiates disarming gratitude at the slightest compliment. He can be vague when the subject turns to why his album took so long, mostly blaming major-label turmoil, though a cocaine and alcohol problem that culminated in a 2005 car crash and rehab stays didn’t help. He’s also a perfectionist, and Black Messiah, with its dizzying layers of vocals, guitar (much of it played by D’Angelo himself, who mastered the instrument during his break), strings and keyboards, is the rare album that seems to have benefited from endless tweaking — it manages to be simultaneously lush and abrasive, bracingly modern and soothingly retro.

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D’Angelo, who turned 41 in February, is clearer on what pushed him to finally release the LP: He had lyrics that dealt powerfully with police violence and black despair, and the protests in Ferguson made him realize it was time. “I was like, ‘Man, I gotta fucking contribute. I gotta participate,’ ” he says. “And I’m done trying to be a perfectionist about it.”

D’Angelo performs on the ‘2000 MTV Movie Awards’ at the Sony Pictures Studio in Culver City, Ca.

Frank Micelotta/ImageDirect/Getty Images

But in the rush, he released only a portion of the album he envisioned. So even as a June tour looms, he’s back in the studio now to try to finish what he’s hoping will be an expeditious follow-up, working with leftover tracks from the same sessions. His gear is in his preferred room, the way he likes it: his custom-made electric guitar, a vintage drum machine, a bass, a gleaming black piano; and in the far corner, a fabric tent where he likes to huddle when recording vocals (“my little tepee,” he calls it). On the floor are boxes from his vinyl LP collection, heavy on gospel vocal groups.

D’Angelo grew up in Richmond, Virginia — his father, a preacher, was mostly out of his life by the time he was nine. But the church loomed large in his upbringing — a child prodigy, he was backing the choir on piano each Sunday at age five. His initial musical fascinations were gospel and the Saturday Night Fever soundtrack, until he heard Prince: “It was love at first bite.”

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The interview continues a couple of days later in a private room booked by his high-powered manager, Kevin Liles, in an exclusive cigar club, the Grand Havana Room. D’Angelo shows up cheerfully at midnight for a 9 p.m. appointment, looking freshly showered and caffeinated. This time, he wears a Kangol cap at a jaunty angle and a shirt that says ‘AFRO PUNK.’ We talk until the club shuts down, then drive aimlessly in an Uber looking for a new location. He makes small talk, big-upping an HBO documentary on Fran Lebowitz and expressing the desire to buy a Pono, before finally coming up with a destination: the studio, once again.

People were wondering if you were ever going to release a new album. Was that a question in your own mind, though?
No one knew what the fuck! [Laughs] But for me, it wasn’t a question, not at all. I had a little anxiety of how it would be received, but I knew it was coming.

The song “Back to the Future (Part 1)” feels like a reintroduction to the world.
When I wrote it, I envisioned it being the first thing people would hear, because it kind of tells the story of where I’ve been: “So, if you’re wondering about the shape I’m in/I hope it ain’t my abdomen that you’re referring to.” It was kind of like me answering some questions, without really being asked. Not just for everybody, but also for myself.

The trippy strings on that song have a “Sgt. Pepper’s” vibe.
Wow, thank you! The Beatles are a major influence for everybody, but when I was writing that song, I was very heavy into them — I was fucking around and doing covers of my favorite Beatles songs, experimenting with shit like that. I also really was digging America Eats Its Young at the time, which was one of the only Funkadelic albums that utilized strings.

The “Charade” lyrics — “All we wanted was a chance to talk/’Stead we only got outlined in chalk” — got a lot of attention for their timeliness.
It just shows how ongoing this shit is, because I wrote that even before the Trayvon Martin thing happened. It’s crazy that we’re still in the streets protesting the same shit. That song was just about the state of society in general — when I say, “A chance to talk,” that means a chance to come to the table and exercise rights that are supposed to be ours already. Me and [co-writer] Kendra [Foster] were reading a lot of [James] Baldwin around that time.

How did you end up with such a richly layered album?
The best way to describe the process is very much like a sculpture. You’re just constantly chipping and chipping away at it. I’ll work on something for a minute, and, once I feel like I’m starting to fixate on it, I put it away and go to another one. I jump around a lot. I play pretty much everything on all of the songs, and after I’m done with the blueprint, then I’ll bring in my guys. Or there are times when it’s just me and Ahmir [Questlove], and he’ll come up with the drum pattern, and I’ll sit around and write the music. Then when Pino comes in on the bass, he can mirror my left hand on the keys in such a way where it’s hard to tell the difference even amongst ourselves.

Can we attribute the delay of the album, ultimately, to your substance issues, or was it much more complicated than that?
The shit that happened in my personal life didn’t help, but it wasn’t just about that. There were moving parts — management changes, record-company changes. Virgin Records went defunct, and before that, they went through personnel changes. Back in the day, the executives actually gave a fuck about music — that’s the biggest change. The music business is a crazy game, especially for somebody like me who is really a purist about the art. Trying to balance the pressures of commercialism, it’s a tightrope. It’s a fine line between sticking to your guns and insanity.

What was the label hoping for?
The label wanted a Voodoo part two. At one point, after Voodoo, I was early in the process of working on new music that would eventually be on Black Messiah, and I let the label know where I was at with it. The music was pretty ahead of the curve, and they weren’t ready for that. They had these young college kids coming in as A&R, trying to tell me, “You should get so-and-so to produce this track, or you should get so-and-so to spit 16 on this.” I remember walking out of a meeting like, “Fuck you, fuck this!” The biggest factor in all of it was money. They cut off funding, and I had to go on the road to generate money on my own to fund the recording.

What has the course of your friendship with Questlove been through all of this?
For the most part, it’s just love. There were peaks and valleys — we’re brothers, and brothers fight. When Dilla died, it hit all of us. [Editor’s note: Voodoo collaborator J Dilla died in 2006, of complications from lupus.] It scared the shit out of me, actually, enough that I really felt my own mortality. I think Ahmir was afraid for me at that point, and sometimes when you feel like that, I guess you don’t quite know how to express it, and there was silence. I just had to go through it and get to the other side of it. And thank God I did.

Ferguson aside, how did you know the album was done?
It was time. Everyone was in the streets, so we sat down with the team and did some soul-searching and decided to put it out. But if it were left entirely up to me, it wouldn’t have come out. I had to get out of my head. Because there were so many songs that I wanted people to hear.

Were you originally thinking of, like, a 36-song triple-LP thing?
It wasn’t that long! [Laughs] But it was longer than what Black Messiah ended up being. What I’m working on now is like a companion piece. I hope people receive it that way. It’s part of the same vision.

The political songs got the most initial attention, but there’s a lot of other things going on there.
Well, a lot of the songs that people didn’t hear really take on those themes even more directly than the songs that are on Black Messiah.

So you could have hit people with something that was kind of like . . .
Almost like a beating over the fucking head [laughs].

There’s rarely a lead vocal by itself on this album — you surround your voice with harmonies. What is that about for you?
I grew up teaching parts to choirs, and I love a whole group of voices singing as one. When I was young, I had an “aha” moment in church. There was a thing called testimony service, and somebody would sing a song, and everyone else would join in, finding a note where they fit. During one of those, a light went on in my head. In that moment, I heard everything — Parliament, the Staple Singers, Curtis Mayfield, Prince — in there. That sound came out of the slave ships, straight from Africa, like in 12 Years a Slave when they’re singing “Roll Jordan Roll.” That’s why that shit resonates. I can just think about that and get chills. So when I got my first four-track recorder and started multitracking my own voice, that was the first thing I aspired to reproduce.

You had people from your church telling you not to play “the devil’s music” — that goes back to the days of Sam Cooke.
I never believed it. They were trying to make me afraid of something I just wasn’t afraid of. And my grandmother, who was like a saint, never said that to me. Just the contrary. She would say, “Go out there and do your thing.”

Someone like Marvin Gaye saw spirituality and sexuality in conflict, but Prince seems to see them as one thing.
That’s the correct way to look at it to me. Marvin might’ve been more conflicted because he was brought up that way. I see making love as a form of worship.

How did you start doing R&B in a hip-hop context?
To me, it’s not melding the two worlds so much as it is exposing where they meet in the middle. To me, Teddy Riley did it with New Jack Swing, which was the bread-and-butter of my high school band Precise. And when I started making hip-hop beats and digging in the crates, I heard things that made me know that shit was there — the Meters and Band of Gypsys sounded like brand-new hip-hop to me. So I started putting the dots together. And my quest was always to take it a step further.

There’s a perception that you were deeply bothered at being shown as a sex object in the “Untitled (How Does It Feel)” video.
I’m at peace with it, and I feel there’s been too much made out of it. Any issues I may have had were me thinking that it wasn’t about the song — that it was all about me appearing in the nude. But now I think people gravitated to how sexy and beautiful the song was. It wouldn’t have raised the eyebrows it did if the song wasn’t good. The video was just a great accompaniment.

What’s your general feeling about race relations? How much optimism do you have?
I’m an idealist. So in that respect I’m very optimistic. At the same time, awareness is the biggest thing we’re missing. When I say “we,” I mean us as black folk.

When I was coming up, popular tastes bent toward consciousness — the Rakims of the world, and the Public Enemys, and the Boogie Down Productions. Discovering Malcolm X was trendy. So if there’s things in the world you want to change, you first have to make those changes within yourself. I hate to sound like a Hallmark card, or like “Man in the Mirror,” but that really is the truth [laughs].

But what should be done in the face of entrenched racism and institutional corruption? What can artists do?
The first and best thing is to speak about it and sing about it. Aretha Franklin was as important to the civil-rights movement as Malcolm X and Medgar Evers. Artists can choose to take on the tremendous amount of responsibility we have, or choose to ignore it. I can’t knock a motherfucker for not singing what I feel like I should sing. But I know it’s time for me to say it.

At the same time, your live show isn’t all that political.
I never want to feel like I’m preaching. I do feel music is a ministry, but I’m not trying to make myself Bob Marley or nothing like that [laughs]. Motherfuckers get themselves in trouble that way — when you put yourself on that pedestal, people don’t expect you to be human.

What do you make of current hip-hop?
No comment [laughs]. I like Kendrick Lamar. I like that album.

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There’s a striking commonality between “Black Messiah” and “To Pimp a Butterfly.”
Mm, that’s dope. He’s jacked into the roots, he respects the lineage. The timing of both was kind of uncanny — it was almost a sign: Motherfuckers are making some shit that’s relevant to the times.

What do you want the next few years of your career to look like?
I want to do what Yahweh is leading me to do. Do I know fully what that is? No, I don’t. I’m trying to keep myself open, my heart open, to receive and to know what that is. But I do want to put a lot of music out there. I feel like, in a lot of respects, that I’m just getting started.

October 14, 2025 0 comments
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Girls Make Beats Summit 2025: Best Photos
Music

Girls Make Beats Summit 2025: Best Photos

by jummy84 October 14, 2025
written by jummy84

Girls Make Beats — a non-profit empowering the next generation of female producers, DJs and engineers — hosted a summit for local middle- and high-school girls at Paramount Pictures in Los Angeles on Friday (Oct. 10) in honor of International Day of the Girl.

Approximately 500 students from L.A., Compton and Inglewood spoke with executives and creatives such as Rochelle Balogun, senior hip-hop & Afro programmer at Amazon Music; Qiana Conley Akinro, senior executive director of the Recording Academy LA Chapter; producer/songwriter Trinity; and songwriter Whitney Phillips during speed mentor sessions. The girls also practiced DJing through virtual reality with Tribe XR and with Serato through TEC Leimert, a Black-owned non-profit dedicated to helping communities of color to keep pace with technological innovations in an effort to bridge a growing digital divide. Other activations at the Girls Make Beats Summit included jamming with pink and purple Girls Make Beats branded guitars in the Plug and Play area, learning about the audio pitch modification tool Melodyne with the musical software company Celemony, and checking out Mobile Sessions, a mobile recording/mix/live production studio built inside of an RV.

The girls later filed into the Paramount Theatre, where they were treated to a performance of “Big Screen” by Girls Make Beats event producer Stichiz and Janice & The JAC Trio, and greeted by host Kaiya Nyasha. Randy Spendlove, president of worldwide music and publishing at Paramount Pictures, Recording Academy CEO Harvey Mason Jr. and Phylicia Fant, global head of music industry and culture collaborations, delivered more remarks. Later, the girls tuned into the “What Is Sync Licensing?” workshop with Racquelle Proctor, senior manager of creative music strategy at Paramount, and the “How to Make a Beat” masterclass with Girls Make Beats founder Tiffany Miranda. And three students won the $1,700 You Glow Girl scholarship.

Girls Make Beats was also honored by Janelle Monáe at Songwriters of North America’s fifth annual Warrior Awards on Sunday evening (Oct. 12).

See some of the best photos from the Girls Make Beats Summit below:

  • The Girls Make Beats Summit in Los Angeles, California, on October 10, 2025.
    Image Credit: Courtesy of Girls Make Beats

    The Girls Make Beats Summit in Los Angeles, California, on October 10, 2025.

  • The Girls Make Beats Summit in Los Angeles, California, on October 10, 2025.The Girls Make Beats Summit in Los Angeles, California, on October 10, 2025.
    Image Credit: Courtesy of Girls Make Beats

    The Girls Make Beats Summit in Los Angeles, California, on October 10, 2025.

  • The Girls Make Beats Summit in Los Angeles, California, on October 10, 2025.The Girls Make Beats Summit in Los Angeles, California, on October 10, 2025.
    Image Credit: Courtesy of Girls Make Beats

    The Girls Make Beats Summit in Los Angeles, California, on October 10, 2025.

  • The Girls Make Beats Summit in Los Angeles, California, on October 10, 2025.The Girls Make Beats Summit in Los Angeles, California, on October 10, 2025.
    Image Credit: Courtesy of Girls Make Beats

    The Girls Make Beats Summit in Los Angeles, California, on October 10, 2025.

  • The Girls Make Beats Summit in Los Angeles, California, on October 10, 2025.The Girls Make Beats Summit in Los Angeles, California, on October 10, 2025.
    Image Credit: Courtesy of Girls Make Beats

    The Girls Make Beats Summit in Los Angeles, California, on October 10, 2025.

  • The Girls Make Beats Summit in Los Angeles, California, on October 10, 2025.The Girls Make Beats Summit in Los Angeles, California, on October 10, 2025.
    Image Credit: Courtesy of Girls Make Beats

    The Girls Make Beats Summit in Los Angeles, California, on October 10, 2025.

  • The Girls Make Beats Summit in Los Angeles, California, on October 10, 2025.The Girls Make Beats Summit in Los Angeles, California, on October 10, 2025.
    Image Credit: Courtesy of Girls Make Beats

    The Girls Make Beats Summit in Los Angeles, California, on October 10, 2025.

  • The Girls Make Beats Summit in Los Angeles, California, on October 10, 2025.The Girls Make Beats Summit in Los Angeles, California, on October 10, 2025.
    Image Credit: Courtesy of Girls Make Beats

    The Girls Make Beats Summit in Los Angeles, California, on October 10, 2025.

  • The Girls Make Beats Summit in Los Angeles, California, on October 10, 2025.The Girls Make Beats Summit in Los Angeles, California, on October 10, 2025.
    Image Credit: Courtesy of Girls Make Beats

    The Girls Make Beats Summit in Los Angeles, California, on October 10, 2025.

  • The Girls Make Beats Summit in Los Angeles, California, on October 10, 2025.The Girls Make Beats Summit in Los Angeles, California, on October 10, 2025.
    Image Credit: Courtesy of Girls Make Beats

    The Girls Make Beats Summit in Los Angeles, California, on October 10, 2025.

  • The Girls Make Beats Summit in Los Angeles, California, on October 10, 2025.The Girls Make Beats Summit in Los Angeles, California, on October 10, 2025.
    Image Credit: Courtesy of Girls Make Beats

    The Girls Make Beats Summit in Los Angeles, California, on October 10, 2025.

  • The Girls Make Beats Summit in Los Angeles, California, on October 10, 2025.The Girls Make Beats Summit in Los Angeles, California, on October 10, 2025.
    Image Credit: Courtesy of Girls Make Beats

    The Girls Make Beats Summit in Los Angeles, California, on October 10, 2025.

  • The Girls Make Beats Summit in Los Angeles, California, on October 10, 2025.The Girls Make Beats Summit in Los Angeles, California, on October 10, 2025.
    Image Credit: Courtesy of Girls Make Beats

    The Girls Make Beats Summit in Los Angeles, California, on October 10, 2025.

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October 14, 2025 0 comments
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Grey DeLisle & Friends Honor Songwriter Cindy Walker » PopMatters
Music

Grey DeLisle & Friends Honor Songwriter Cindy Walker » PopMatters

by jummy84 October 14, 2025
written by jummy84

It’s All Her Fault: A Tribute to Cindy Walker

Grey DeLisle & Friends

Hummin’bird

10 October 2025

Songwriter Cindy Walker’s name is well-known to country music fans. Her songs have charted more than 400 times, recorded by icons such as Ray Charles, Bob Wills, Roy Orbison, and Elvis Presley. Willie Nelson released an entire album devoted to Walker’s work: (You Don’t Know Me: The Songs of Cindy Walker) back in 2006. She has been celebrated for her ability to capture emotional moments in everyday situations that define our lives, such as meeting an old lover, aging gracefully, and dreaming of a better future.

Grey DeLisle, a longtime admirer of Cindy Walker, is best known for her voice acting work, but she’s also a Grammy-winning singer-songwriter. With her own deep roots in music, DeLisle recognizes the significance of Walker’s legacy as a pioneering country music auteur. So when she learned that Walker’s childhood home was deteriorating, she rallied a group of female country artists to record a tribute album. The proceeds will support the restoration efforts led by the Cindy Walker Foundation.

The results are outstanding, which is not surprising considering the talents of those contributing to the project and Walker’s songwriting prowess. Highlights include Amythyst Kiah’s solo acoustic rendition of “Goin’ Away Party”, a tearjerker sung with an intimate sneer; Mandy Barnett’s swinging “Dream Baby (How Long Must I Dream), and Gail Davies’ weepy “Warm Red Wine”. While the individual tracks all have merit, there is not a weak cut on the record; the results are serendipitously better than the sum of its parts.

Taken as a whole, the album reveals Walker’s ability to celebrate and entertain as well as comfort and console with the knowledge that all these emotions are an essential part of just living. Her narrators understand the thin, semipermeable line that separates happiness from sadness. Walker’s lyrics are lightened by a sense of humor and a drop or two of alcohol. Several of the songs are barroom ballads, such as Summer Dean’s blissfully bluesy “Don’t Talk to Me About Men”, that put a tear in your beer and a smile on your face.

Some songs benefit from having a female perspective, but were not originally written with it in mind. Rosie Flores does a plaintive version of the classic “You Don’t Know Me” (penned initially for Eddy Arnold). Flores lets the lyrics do the heavy lifting. This approach enhances the song’s melodrama. Instead of sobbing, Flores’ stoicism makes the pain sharper. The fact that a female protagonist delivers the message suggests a different set of sexual politics.

In contrast, Kelly Willis croons, “I Don’t Care” with an ache in her throat. She expresses the absence of hurt and subsequent happiness by implying how bad she would feel without finding love.  Brennan Leight and Grey DeLisle take this a step further on the bubbly “You’ve Got My Heart Doing a Tap-Dance”. There’s not a drop of sadness in this song!

Other seemingly happy songs include Kimmi Bitter’s lively “Hey, Mr. Bluebird”, whose lyrics convey a deep depression (“I’ve been so lonesome that I could die / and tears like raindrops keep falling from my eyes”) sung in a light, lilting tone. One would think the narrator was joyful. Bitter disguises her despair by hiding it behind a cheerful sheen.

Walker plays it straight on songs like the breezy anthem “You’re From Texas”, brightly performed here by Katie Shore, Melissa Carper‘s loving “Take Me in Your Arms”, Ginny Mac’s doleful “The Day You Left Me”, and Mozzy Dee’s semi-confessional “It’s All Your Fault”. All of these songs have aged well and profit from finding new audiences through the latest renditions. Jolie Holland‘s clever take on “Don’t Be Ashamed of Your Age” explicitly makes that message clear. These songs may be oldies, but they remain goodies.

October 14, 2025 0 comments
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D'Angelo Dead, Neo Soul Pioneer Was 51
Music

D’Angelo Dead, Neo Soul Pioneer Was 51

by jummy84 October 14, 2025
written by jummy84

D’Angelo, the neo soul pioneer who revolutionized R&B music, has died at the age of 51 following a private battle with pancreatic cancer.

TMZ reports that the singer passed away Tuesday morning in New York City. His family confirmed the news in a statement issued to Variety. “The shining star of our family has dimmed his light for us in this life,” it reads. “After a prolonged and courageous battle with cancer, we are heartbroken to announce that Michael D’Angelo Archer, known to his fans around the world as D’Angelo, has been called home, departing this life today, October 14th, 2025.”

The statement continues, “We are saddened that he can only leave dear memories with his family, but we are eternally grateful for the legacy of extraordinarily moving music he leaves behind. We ask that you respect our privacy during this difficult time but invite you all join us in mourning his passing while also celebrating the gift of song that he has left for the world.”

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Born Michael Eugene Archer on February 11th, 1974, in South Richmond, Virginia, D’Angelo began playing the piano as a child. While in high school, he achieved local success as part of the trio Three of a Kind, which later won three Amateur Night contests at Harlem’s Apollo Theater.

After going solo, D’Angelo burst onto the scene with his 1995 debut album, Brown Sugar. It was at the forefront of the burgeoning neo soul movement, a term coined by his manager, Kedar Massenburg, which also featured artists such as Erykah Badu, Lauryn Hill, and Maxwell.

D’Angelo was scheduled to headline Roots Picnic this past summer, but canceled the appearance.

This is a developing story…

October 14, 2025 0 comments
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Buddy Red. (Credit: Quadir Thomas)
Music

Buddy Red Gets the Blues

by jummy84 October 14, 2025
written by jummy84

The 2018 film Bohemian Rhapsody had a profound effect on Buddy Red, who was 18 years old when the Oscar-winning Queen biopic came out. “Once I saw the movie, it’s like a lightbulb just flickered on in my mind. I said, ‘This is what I’m looking for,’” the shy, soft-spoken Red recalls on a day off at home in Atlanta, although he still looks like he’s dressed to perform in a sharp wide-collared dress shirt. “My musical taste, all the things that I listen to, the fact that Freddie Mercury was a nobody and a little bit of a weirdo until he became Freddie Mercury. And I always feel, y’know, a little out of place. Maybe all this stuff is for a reason, maybe I’m supposed to be on a stage somewhere and really showing people something that they haven’t seen before.”

Quickly, he became a man on a mission. “That’s when I realized I have to play an instrument, because I was producing, making hip-hop beats, before I saw the movie,’” he says. “I said, ‘Let me hurry up and buy a guitar before I talk myself out of it.” The result is a series of singles including “Sold His Soul,” released in August, that feature Red ripping bluesy riffs and psychedelic solos that instantly bring to mind a young Jimi Hendrix.

(Credit: Quadir Thomas)

Buddy Red comes from a musical family, but he’s operating in a different genre from the other performers in his household. He was born Messiah Harris, the eldest child of rap superstar Clifford “T.I.” Harris. His stepmother is Tameka “Tiny” Cottle of the ’90s R&B hitmakers Xscape, and two of his brothers, King and Domani, are also rappers. 

In fact, I interviewed T.I. for SPIN five years ago, singling out the Messiah Harris-produced track “Family Connect” as one of the best songs on the rap veteran’s 2020 album The L.I.B.R.A. The self-proclaimed King of the South recalled how he was spurred to work with the producer 9th Wonder because his son was a fan. “I just kinda linked him with 9th, and they got together. 9th came down, him and Messiah hooked up and exchanged some of their techniques, they use the same machine,” T.I. told me at the time.

As Messiah Harris fell in love with classic rock bands like Pink Floyd as well as ’80s synth pop, he started to feel a little isolated. “Very early on I realized in my musical journey, I’m gonna be on my own a lot, because a lot of people around me don’t hear things that I hear the way that I hear them,” he says, recalling the musical education he received from his family. “They’re only playing me 2Pac, they’re only playing me TLC or New Edition. Of course I’m gonna ask you, why haven’t you played me Rick Astley or Alphaville or Queen?”

(Credit: Quadir Thomas)
(Credit: Quadir Thomas)

Red, who was in college at Georgia State when he bought his first guitar, resembles his father more closely than any of his siblings do, the same distinctive, handsome features framed by a thicker mane of hair and a scruffy beard. But he speaks a lot more slowly and cautiously than T.I., at times seeming more like a nervous teenager than the worldly bluesman, wise beyond his 25 years, that he seems like onstage. When he went to New York City for the studio session to record “Sold His Soul,” he was overwhelmed by the difference from the deep south he grew up in. “I was immediately intimidated by my surroundings. I’m by myself, it’s my first time in New York alone, I don’t know any of these people, the subway looks scary as hell.” 

Red does, however, dress as loudly as many of his musical idols, favoring vests, neckerchiefs and flowing scarves. “My fashion sense, didn’t start to come about until I started collecting records. That’s when I started looking at the people that I was listening to,” he says. “That’s when I started looking at what Robert Plant was wearing, that’s when I started looking at the crazy outfits the Jimi Hendrix Experience was wearing.” 

Soon, he started to work out a stage name to go with his guitar-driven songs, taking inspiration from the members of Pink Floyd, who had combined the names of two of their favorite blues singers, Pink Anderson and Floyd Council. “I said, ‘Okay, how can I do that?’ And I’m thinking about my grandfather on my father’s side, his name’s Buddy,” he says. “And I’m thinking about my mother’s side of the family, she says that the way that I dress and the music I listen to, always reminds her of her brother Red, my Uncle Red. I’m thinking Buddy… Red… Buddy Red, that’s how it came to be.”

As people started to learn that one of T.I.’s sons is a rocker, some other Southern hip-hop greats who’ve dabbled in playing the guitar have taken an interest in Buddy Red. “People like Andre 3000 speak to my pops about me, Lil Wayne has spoken to my pops about me,” Red says. “I think once he started seeing the effect that I’m having on people, that’s when he started doing his best to guide me creatively. It’s been times before that, where he said, ‘If you want me to be honest, I don’t know what to do with you, I don’t know anything about this, I gotta do my research.’”

The Buddy Red discography is small so far—just five solo tracks released over the last three years, plus a guest appearance on Atlanta singer ilypicasso’s track “Attachments” earlier this year. “1958” is his most popular song, and it’s also the only time so far that he’s operated as a one-man band, playing all the guitar, bass, and drums on the self-produced track. “I wanna get more into that going forward, because I think I sound pretty good,” he says.

Buddy Red has written other songs that fill out his live set, and in the last few weeks he’s performed at the Butter Fine Arts Fair in Indianapolis and the Neon Prairie Festival in Tulsa, backed by a drummer and bassist. But he’s worked with a variety of different producers and musicians in the studio so far, and really wants to lock down a consistent sound and personnel before he makes a full-length album. “It’s not really cohesive, so before I start thinking about how to put this project out, I want a team that wants to put one type of project out, and I’m still looking for it,” he says. “I have a couple of meetings later this week with some producers to talk about what it is that I wanna do.”

Red’s Indianapolis performance featured the debut of a new cover in his repertoire that reflects how he’s still seeking out different corners of rock history: “No Fun” by the Stooges. “I discovered the Stooges for myself maybe a few months ago, and when I did, I said, ‘Wow, this is what I’ve been looking for,’” he says. “I love Iggy Pop’s voice and how he doesn’t really care, he can screech, he can do this Midwestern drawl, he’s not taking himself so seriously up there. I wish I didn’t take myself so seriously, so when I played ‘No Fun’ for the first time, it felt really liberating, and I discovered a new style for myself right then and there.”

October 14, 2025 0 comments
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Marc Lamont Hill, Queenzflip Argue On 'The Joe Budden Podcast'
Music

Marc Lamont Hill, Queenzflip Argue On ‘The Joe Budden Podcast’

by jummy84 October 14, 2025
written by jummy84

There are a few certainties in life: death, taxes, and The Joe Budden Podcast going viral for chaotic takes, hilarious moments, heated arguments…or some combination of the three. This week, co-hosts Marc Lamont Hill and Queenzflip had a tense exchange that went viral, producing entertainment for the entire internet.

Although the content was a Patreon exclusive, subscribers felt that those who did not pay for the extra JBP content needed to see what went down. Early in the clip, the political analyst and internet comedian were already going at it; Hill questioned Flip about whether he believed he would do something shady, and Flip repeated that he did not know. Their co-host Emanny jumped in and wondered if the footage should be released, which prompted Joe Budden to share one of his few comments throughout the argument.

“It’s going out,” he said. “The second y’all wanna care about what people shouldn’t see, then shut up. This is going out. This is going right out. FedEx, too. UPS. Here’s the tracking link.” It appeared like Hill and Flip tried to keep that in mind, sharing an “I love you” to defuse their heightened emotions. However, things picked right back up soon after.

Joe budden cohosts queenzflip and Marc Lamont hill almost fight after things gets super heated on the show ? via Joe budden patreon the most heated moment on the show ever ? pic.twitter.com/u2rk6g1vvK

— joebuddenclips/fanpage (@chatnigga101) October 13, 2025

Hill seemingly attempted to prove his integrity by telling Flip he had never divulged any of their private moments or things Flip may not want people to know about. “Whatever you ever told me, you know ain’t never come out,” he said. “And whatever happened that I witnessed, I ain’t never said sh*t about. I’m not gon’ say it because then that would be saying it. That’s all I’m gon’ say. Can’t nobody up here say nothing different.”

Flip seemed to take issue with the way Hill communicated, saying he “said a lot of tricky words,” almost as if he intentionally tried to deceive people. “No, I don’t,” Hill said. “I say regular words, and it’s tricky to you.” Their debate peaked when Flip was evaluating their purposes on the show and said Hill does “sucker sh*t,” setting Hill off in the process.

“Don’t call me a sucker no more,” Hill repeated, while Flip clarified that he was not calling him a “sucker,” but his actions. Hill could not be reasoned with and suggested they go outside to talk when Flip stood up while repeating his points. “I’m not podding,” he said. “Don’t f**king stand up. Are we talking or are we podding? We can talk outside or we can pod.” Ultimately, the context of the debate is still unclear, but fans can subscribe to The Joe Budden Podcast Patreon to watch the full episode and see what prompted this. Hill also addressed the situation in his own 11-minute video on Patreon, which can be accessed here.

I got caught up in the moment, but in retrospect I don’t feel that way. It was all entertainment from my side — I’m here to put on and go home. Team player, always. ?

— QueenzFlip (@QueenzFlip) October 13, 2025

Flip addressed the situation directly on X. “Just to clear the air: I was never coming at the fans,” he said. He clarified in the tweet that their issue stemmed from a conversation behind the scenes, and Budden actually triggered it by mentioning the hosts’ compensation. “I got caught up in the moment, but in retrospect I don’t feel that way,” Flip wrote in a follow-up tweet. “It was all entertainment from my side — I’m here to put on and go home. Team player, always.”

October 14, 2025 0 comments
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Peaches Announces Tour and First Album in 10 Years, Shares New Song: Listen
Music

Peaches Announces Tour and First Album in 10 Years, Shares New Song: Listen

by jummy84 October 14, 2025
written by jummy84

Peaches is back with a new song, along with the announcement of a tour and her first album in a decade. The follow-up to her 2015 album Rub is called No Lube So Rude, and it comes out on an unspecified date next year. “Not in Your Mouth None of Your Business,” recorded with producer the Squirt Deluxe, is out right now, and you can listen to it below.

The North American tour kicks off in February, 2026, with support from Model/Actriz and Cortisa Star. A dollar from each ticket sale will go to Trans Justice Funding Project, via Plus1.

Peaches says of the new music, “When the world is friction, lube isn’t a luxury. It’s a necessity. It’s how you turn that friction into pleasure, into power, into pride. I want people to understand that they can still have a voice no matter who they are or what the world says about them. Now more than ever, there are so many forces that just want you to give up and be quiet. If this album can help you resist that, then that’s what it’s for.” The video description adds that it is “a chant
for trans and queer autonomy.”

Revisit Jessica Hopper’s 2015 interview “The Pleasure of Peaches.”

Peaches:

02-20 Miami, FL – ZeyZey *
02-21 Orlando, FL – Beacham Theater *
02-24 Atlanta, GA – Buckhead Theatre *
02-25 Norfolk, VA – NorVa *
02-27 Washington, DC – 9:30 Club
02-28 New York, NY – Knockdown Center *
03-01 Philadelphia, PA – Union Transfer *
03-03 Montreal, Quebec – Rialto Theatre *
03-04 Toronto, Ontario – Danforth Music Hall *
03-06 Detroit, MI – Lincoln Factory ~
03-07 Chicago, IL – The Vic Theatre ~
03-08 Minneapolis, MN – Varsity Theater ~
03-10 Denver, CO – Summit ~
03-11 Salt Lake City, UT – The Grand at the Complex ~
03-13 Vancouver, British Columbia – Commodore Ballroom
03-14 Seattle, WA – The Showbox
03-15 Portland, OR – Crystal Ballroom
03-17 Eugene, OR – WOW Hall
03-19 San Francisco, CA – Midway SF
03-20 Los Angeles, CA – The Bellwether
03-21 Los Angeles, CA – The Bellwether
03-23 San Diego, CA – The Sound
03-24 Phoenix, AZ – Walter Studios
03-25 Tucson, AZ – La Rosa
03-27 Austin, TX – Central Machine Works
03-28 Dallas, TX – The Studio at the Factory
03-29 New Orleans, LA – Republic NOLA

* with Model/Actriz
~ with Cortisa Star

October 14, 2025 0 comments
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Alec Baldwin "crushed" wife's car in road accident
Music

Alec Baldwin “crushed” wife’s car in road accident

by jummy84 October 14, 2025
written by jummy84

Alec Baldwin has been involved in a car crash along with his brother, actor Stephen Baldwin, in The Hamptons on Monday (October 13) afternoon.

The actor, known for films such as The Hunt For Red October and TV show 30 Rock, crashed a white Range Rover into a tree in the US seaside resort, and spoke to officers at the scene. The incident was captured by Page Six, and the actor appeared uninjured.

The outlet reports that Baldwin had been in the area for the Hamptons International Film Festival, something seemingly confirmed by the actor in a video posted on his Instagram addressing the situation.

Alec Baldwin crashes Range Rover into tree in the Hamptons https://t.co/jIdrAUv6Ky pic.twitter.com/JgGCznsUqp

— New York Post (@nypost) October 13, 2025

“My brother Stephen was visiting me. And we spent the weekend out there for the film festival,” he said. “This morning I was in a car accident, this guy cut me off. A big garbage truck … a garbage truck the size of a whale … it was the biggest garbage truck I’d ever seen … to avoid hitting him, I hit a tree. I hit a big fat tree and crushed my wife’s car.”

He continued: “I crushed my wife’s car and I feel bad about that. But it’s all fine and I’m fine and my brother’s fine.”

Once one of Hollywood’s most in-demand stars, Baldwin has been away from the big screen since a fatal shooting on the set of the Western Rust. On October 21, 2021, he discharged a revolver used as a prop and was unaware that it had been improperly loaded with live ammunition, resulting in the death of cinematographer Halyna Hutchins.

In 2023, he was charged with involuntary manslaughter in a case which was then dropped and was tried again in 2024. The case against the actor was dismissed last July, and officially concluded in December 2024 after New Mexico prosecutors decided not to pursue an appeal of the court’s decision to dismiss an involuntary manslaughter charge against him. Baldwin has since filed a lawsuit against the district attorney and other Santa Fe officials for malicious prosecution and civil rights violations.

The aftermath of the shooting was covered in The Baldwins, a reality show following the actor and his wife Hilaria. During the show, Alec Baldwin reflected on “terrible” mental health decline after the shooting, confessing: “I’m happier when I’m asleep.”

The show, which debuted in February on TLC, was described as “shameless” by Hutchins’ family.

October 14, 2025 0 comments
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Sammy Hagar Taps Belinda Carlisle, Jerry Cantrell for Birthday Shows
Music

Sammy Hagar Taps Belinda Carlisle, Jerry Cantrell for Birthday Shows

by jummy84 October 14, 2025
written by jummy84

Carlisle also sang her solo hit “Heaven Is a Place on Earth” and Jerry Cantrell played guitar on Alice in Chains’ “Man in the Box” at one of the Red Rocker’s birthday-bash shows in Mexico

Sammy Hagar has spent the past week gearing up to celebrate his 78th birthday with a bunch of shows at his Cabo Wabo resort in Cabo San Lucas, Mexico. He’s been joined by guests galore over the course of the shows, including a surprise appearance from Belinda Carlisle, who popped by Saturday night’s gig, Oct. 11, to perform two of her biggest songs.

First, Carlisle bounded onstage to join Hagar for a lively rendition of the Go-Go’s 1980 classic, “We Got the Beat.” Carlisle then delivered her 1987 solo hit, “Heaven Is a Place on Earth,” with guitarist Steve Salas and the rest of Hagar’s backing band lending the shimmering power-pop gem a crunchier, hard rock edge. 

Along with Carlisle, Hagar’s ongoing birthday bash has featured appearances from guests like Anthrax vocalist Joey Belladonna, Van Halen bassist Michael Anthony, and Bon Jovi guitarist Phil X. Jerry Cantrell has also been a recurring guest, playing guitar on various tracks, including several Alice in Chains classics like “Rooster,” “Would?”, and “Man in the Box.” 

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Cantrell has also guested on renditions of Van Halen’s “Ain’t Talkin’ ‘Bout Love,” and a cover of the Beastie Boys’ “(You Gotta) Fight for Your Right (To Party!)” (per Setlist.fm). 

Hagar turns 78 today, Oct. 13, and he’s set to celebrate with the fourth and final show of his birthday bash. He has one more gig scheduled for 2025, a solo show Fontana Youth Music Foundation’s inaugural gala in Fontana, California. But next year the Red Rocker will return to Las Vegas for his Best of All Worlds residency at Dolby Live at Park MGM, with shows scheduled in March and September.

October 14, 2025 0 comments
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